Wednesday 19 January 2011

The UK output gap: is it narrower than the Bank of England thinks?

Over the last year, the UK economy has recorded four decent quarters of positive growth. That is good news. At the same time, if this growth continues, then it hard to see how real sector developments will exert any downward pressure on inflation.

In justifying their negative bank rate policy, the Bank of England has placed great emphasis on the output gap - the difference between actual and potential output. When this gap is large, and there are a lot of unemployed resources, which should bear down on prices and squeeze out inflationary pressures.

In recent inflation reports, the Bank has reiterated its belief that the output gap remains large and negative. This belief is also based on the magnitude of the recession, which was extremely deep. The recent upswing in growth has a long way in order to achieve the level of growth enjoyed in 2007.

But suppose the financial crisis has permanently reduced potential output. Then benchmarking the output gap on 2007 would be a dangerous mistake. It would over-estimate the size of the gap. If the gap is narrower than the Bank thinks, then recent growth could be contributing to higher price pressure.

The appalling December inflation number suggests something is not quite right with the Bank of England's output gap story.

3 comments:

Jean said...

Won't higher interest rates lower GDP andnincrease unemployment? Or am I missing something?

Anonymous said...

Six negative bars - representing Brown's idiot policies. That was the bill for Brown.

Anonymous said...

The BoE has been using this "spare capacity' argument for some time, claiming it as a downward pressure on inflation. We've heard it repeatedly, and the theory just hasn't predicted what has happened.

I suspect the notion is something of a fallacy, if not deliberate obfuscation born of the desperate wish to keep interest rates low to inflate debt away and bolster bank balances through generous interest rate differentials.

What the market takes of the goods and services we produce at the prices we offer them is what it is.

Companies can downsize to the scale at which they can make a profit at these lower levels, and that is what they have done, rather than cut prices to increase overall sales. Done deal. Where they can they will increase prices to increase profits, rather than risk over-production.

B. in C.